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                            CssClass="LinkStyle1">Pokemon University</asp:HyperLink>
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            <h1>
                Frequently Asked Questions</h1>
            <h3>
                A1. What releases of Java technology are currently available? What do they contain?</h3>
            <a>The Java programming language is currently shipping from Sun Microsystems, Inc. as
                the Java 2 SDK and Java 2 Runtime Environment. All Sun releases of the Java 2 Platform
                software are available from the Java 2 Platform software home page (http://java.sun.com/j2se/).
                Each release of the Java 2 SDK, Standard Edition contains: Java Compiler Java Virtual
                Machine* Java Class Libraries Java AppletViewer Java Debugger and other tools Documentation
                (in a separate download bundle) To run Java 1.0 applets, use Netscape Navigator
                3.x or other browsers that support Java applets. To run Java 1.1.x applets, use
                HotJava 1.x or Netscape Navigator 4.x or other browsers that support the newest
                version of the Java API.</a>
            <h3>
                A2.What platforms is the Java-technology software available on?</h3>
            <a>Sun provides ports of the Java 2 Platform for Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT,
                Windows 2000, Solaris-SPARC, Solaris-Intel, and Linux.</a>
            <h3>
                A3. Should I use the Production Release or Reference Implementation of the Solaris
                JDK software and JRE?</h3>
            <a>The following applies to versions prior to 1.3.0. Starting with J2SE 1.3.0, only
                the production release exists. There is no Solaris reference implementation.</a>
            <h3>
                A4. I can't find the API documentation on any classes in the sun.* packages. Where
                is it?</h3>
            <a>The short answer is that we provide documentation only for the public classes in
                java.*. We do not provide documentation for sun.* because those are the Sun-specific
                implementation, and specifically not part of the Java technology API standard, and
                are therefore subject to change without notice. In general, we don't provide javadoc
                documentation for sun.* classes in order to discourage developers from writing programs
                that use them. For further explanation, see the next question. However, if you must
                have it, the documentation for sun.* is available in the doc comments in the community
                source code release available separately, mentioned in question A14. For example,
                the doc comments for sun.net are in the source files located at: /src/share/sun/sun/net/*.java
                This source code release does not include javadoc-generated documentation. You would
                have to generate those docs yourself using javadoc.</a>
            <h3>
                A5. Why developers should not write programs that call 'sun' packages</h3>
            <a>Java Software supports into the future only classes in java.* packages, not sun.*
                packages. In general, API in sun.* is subject to change at any time without notice.
                For more details, see the article Why Developers Should Not Write Programs That
                Call 'sun' Packages.</a>
            <h3>
                A6. Do I need special server software to use applets?</h3>
            <a>No. Java applets may be served by any HTTP server. On the server side they are handled
                the same as any other file, such as a text, image, or sound file. All the special
                action happens when the applet class files are interpreted on the client side by
                a Java technology-enabled browser, such as HotJava browser or 1.x or Netscape 3.x/4.x.</a>
            <h3>
                A7. What about a version for my favorite platform? When can I get it?</h3>
            <a>These are extremely popular and important questions. What we can currently say is:
                Amiga, NeXT, OS/2, Windows 3.1, Windows 32s, Macintosh, ... We've provided our source
                code to make third-party ports like these possible, but we are not officially overseeing
                or tracking them. For more information, please check out: Platforms Supporting Java
                technology (http://java.sun.com/cgi-bin/java-ports.cgi)</a>
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